• Title/Summary/Keyword: Electron Spin Resonance

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In vitro Antioxidant Potential and Oxidative DNA Damage Protecting Activity of the Ethanol Extracts of Cacalia firma Komar (병풍쌈의 에탄올 추출물의 항산화 기능 및 DNA의 산화적 손상 억제작용)

  • Lee, Jin-Ha;Lee, Bong-Gyeong;Park, Ae-Ri;Lee, Kye-Jhae;Choi, Dae-Woon;Han, Sang-Hwa;Choi, Geun-Pyo;Kim, Jong-Dai;Kim, Jin-Chul;Ahn, Ju-Hee;Lee, Hyeon-Yong;Shin, In-Chul;Park, Hee-Juhn
    • Journal of Applied Biological Chemistry
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    • v.54 no.4
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    • pp.258-264
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    • 2011
  • The Korean edible mountainous vegetable, byeongpungssam, Cacalia firma Komar. (CFK) is a wild plant found in the intermountain areas in Korea. The aim of this study was to investigate its free radical scavenging activity using 1,1-diphenyl-2-picryl-hydrazyl, 2,2-azinobis(3-ethylbenozothiazoline- 6-sulfonic acid) diammonium salt, ferric reducing/antioxidant power assays, an electron spin resonance spectroscopy. We also examined its protective effect against oxidative DNA damage using agarose electrophoresis of ethanol extract of CFK. The protective activity of the extract against the DNA damage induced by HO${\cdot}$ radicals was compared to epicatechin, ascorbic acid and trolox as reference antioxidant compounds. Total phenolic content in the extract was determined spectrometrically according to the Folin-Ciocalteu procedure and calculated as gallic acid equivalents. Total polyphenolic content of the extract was measured in the leaves ($161.53{\pm}1.07{\mu}g/g$) and shoot ($142.45{\pm}0.56{\mu}g/g$). The antioxidant potential of the extracts against some radicals and DNA damage by HO${\cdot}$ radicals showed over 60%, respectively.

High Energy Photon Dosimetry by ESR Spectroscopy in Radiotherapy (ESR Spectroscopy에 의한 치료용 고에너지 광자선의 선량측정)

  • Chu, Sung-Sil
    • Progress in Medical Physics
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    • v.1 no.1
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    • pp.31-42
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    • 1990
  • The finding of long lived free radicals produced by ionizing radiation in organic crystals and the quantification of this effect by electron spin resonance(ESR) spactroscopy has proven excellent dosimetric applicability. The tissue equivalent alanine dosimeter also appear appropriate for radiation therapy level dosimetry. The dose measurement was performed in a Rando phantom using high energy photons as produced by high energy medical linear accelerator and cobalt-60 teletherapy unit. The absorbed dose range of the ESR/alanine dosimetry system could be extended down to 0.1 Gy. The response of the alanine dosimeters was determined for photons at different therapeutic dose levels from less than 0.1 Gy to 100 Gy and the depth dose measurements were carried out for photon energies of 1.25MeV, 6 and 10 MV with alanine dosimeters in Rando phantom. Comparisons between ESR/alanine in a Rando phantom and ion chamber in a water phantom were made performing depth dose measurements to examine the agreement of both methods under field conditions.

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Detection Characteristics of TL, ESR and DNA Comet for Irradiated Soybeans (열발광, 전자스핀공명 및 DNA Comet 분석에 의한 대두의 방사선 조사 여부 검지 특성)

  • Lee, Eun-Young;Jeong, Jae-Young;Noh, Jung-Eun;Jo, Deok-Jo;Kwon, Joong-Ho
    • Korean Journal of Food Science and Technology
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    • v.34 no.1
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    • pp.18-23
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    • 2002
  • The detection characteristics of gamma-irradiated $(0{\sim}4\;kGy)$ soybeans produced in Korea and China were investigated by thermoluminescene (TL), electron spin resonance (ESR), and DNA comet assay. The TL glow curves were shown at around $200^{\circ}C$ for irradiated soybeans, while that at $280^{\circ}C$ for the non-irradiated one. The normalization with a re-irradiation step at 1 kGy could verify the above detection results. The Korean soybean showed higher glow curves than Chinese did. The ESR spectroscopy for husks of irradiated soybeans revealed specific signals (g = 2.02374, 1.98715) derived from cellulose radical, which intensities were proportional to irradiation does, with the higher peaks in Chinese sample than Korean one. The DNA comet for the non-irradiated sample showed no or little tails, while those for irradiated samples above 0.5 kGy were remarkably changed in their length, size, and concentration, thus resulting in distinguishing non-irradiated from irradiated samples. As a result, TL, ESR, and DNA comet determinations were found suitable for the detection of irradiated soybean at 0.5 kGy or more, and negligible differences were observed between Korean and Chinese origins in their detection characteristics.

Characteristics of Thermoluminescence and Electron Spin Resonance and Organoleptic Quality of Irradiated Raisin and Dried Banana During Storage (건포도와 건바나나의 감마선 조사와 저장기간에 따른 열발광 및 전자스핀공명 특성과 관능적 품질)

  • Jo, Deok-Jo;Kwon, Joong-Ho
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Food Science and Nutrition
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    • v.31 no.4
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    • pp.609-614
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    • 2002
  • The characteristics of thermoluminescence (TL) and electron spin resonance (ESR) and organoleptic qualities of gamma-irradiated raisin and dried banana were investigated during storage at 4$^{\circ}C$ for 6 months. The minerals separated from non-irradiated raisins showed TL glow curve (TL$_1$) with very low intensity around 200~30$0^{\circ}C$, while the irradiated samples at 1 kGy or more showed glow curves with higher intensity around 18$0^{\circ}C$, with linear increase by irradiation dose ($R^2$=0.9684), which made it possible to identify irradiated samples during 6 months. Moreover, TL ratios (TL$_1$/TL$_2$) through the reirradiation step at 1 kGy enhanced confidence in the identification of irradiated raisins. The ESR signals of multicomponent lines resulted from crystalline sugar radicals were shown in irradiated banana, identifying irradiated samples. The ESR signal intensity was dependent on irradiation doses ($R^2$=0.8977) and the signals were stable enough to be detected by 6th month after storage. Considering tile marketability of irradiated dried fruits during 6 months at low temperature TL and ESR analyses were shown suitable for the identification of irradiated raisins and dried banana, respectively.

Analyzing a Physical Marker to Identify Irradiated Dried Garlic and Cabbage (건마늘과 건양배추의 방사선 조사여부 확인을 위한 물리적 마커 분석)

  • Kim, Dong-Gil;Ahn, Jae-Jun;Jin, Qiong-Wen;Lee, Ho-Cheon;Kwon, Joong-Ho
    • Korean Journal of Food Science and Technology
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    • v.41 no.2
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    • pp.136-140
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    • 2009
  • The verification of irradiation treatments, using dried garlic and cabbage treated at 0-20 kGy, was investigated by analyzing the photostimulated luminescence (PSL), electron spin resonance (ESR) and thermoluminescence (TL) characteristics of the samples. The PSL results showed that the photon counts/60 sec of the non-irradiated dried garlic and cabbage were 287-337, corresponding to negative, while those of the irradiated samples were 7511-54063 photon counts/ 60 sec, corresponding to positive, making it possible to discriminate the non-irradiated from the irradiated samples. In ESR analysis, the dried garlic irradiated at 20 kGy exhibited cellulose radicals, whereas the irradiated dried cabbage showed crystalline sugar-induced multi-component signals, which were not found in the non-irradiated samples. The ESR signal intensity significantly increased as the irradiation dose increase ($R^2$= 0.9369 - 0.9926). The TL glow curves of the irradiated samples appeared at a temperature interval of 150-250, which were significantly different from those of non-irradiated samples, showing a significant increase in TL signal intensity with irradiation dose ($R^2$= 0.9670 - 0.9768). To enhance the reliability of the results, the first glow curve ($TL_1$) was compared with the second glow curve ($TL_2$) obtained after a re-irradiation step at 1 kGy. The TL ratio ($TL_1/TL_2$) was in good agreement with the reported TL threshold values for both the non-irradiated (<0.1) and irradiated (> 0.1) samples.

Multistep Identification of γ-Irradiated Boiled-Dried Anchovies by Analysis of Thermoluminescence, Electron Spin Resonance, Hydrocarbon and 2-Alkylcyclobutanone (건멸치의 방사선 조사 확인을 위한 열발광, 전자스핀공명, Hydrocarbon 및 2-Alkylcyclobutanone의 다중분석)

  • 노정은;권중호
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Food Science and Nutrition
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    • v.32 no.1
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    • pp.8-14
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    • 2003
  • Multistep detection was peformed to identify irradiated dried anchovy. In thermoluminescence (TL) analysis, non-irradiated samples represented a lower peak at about 28$0^{\circ}C$, but irradiated samples showed a higher peak at around 20$0^{\circ}C$. The normalization with a re-irradiation step at 1 kGy could verify the identification results. Electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy for bones separated from irradiated anchovy revealed specific signals (g=2.002,1.998) derived from a hydroxyapatite radical, which intensities were in proportion to the irradiation doses and still detectable even after 6 months of storage at -2$0^{\circ}C$. Six kinds of hydrocarbons (HC) were observed in dried anchovy samples and 1,7-hexadecadiene and 1-hexadecene were only detected in irradiated anchovy at 1 kGy or more. Also among 3 kinds of radiation-induced 2-alkylcyclobutanones (2-ACB) observed, 2-dodecylcy-clobutanone and 2-tetradecylcyclobutanone were unique in irradiated anchovy. As a result, the concentration of radiation-induced HCs and 2-ACBs were dependent on the irradiation dose and detectable after 6 months of storage. However, TL and ESR analyses were found simpler than the other methods for identification of irradiated boiled-dried anchovy.

The Detection of Irradiated Composite Seasoning Foods by Analyzing Photostimulated Luminescence (PSL), Electron Spin Resonance (ESR) and Thermoluminescence (TL) (PSL, ESR 및 TL 측정에 의한 복합조미식품의 방사선 조사여부 검지)

  • Kwon Joong-Ho;Kim Mi-Yeung;Kim Byeong-Keun;Chung Hyung-Wook;Kim Tae-Cheol;Kim Soo-Jin
    • Food Science and Preservation
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    • v.13 no.1
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    • pp.55-60
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    • 2006
  • Two kinds of composite seasoning products (beef broth powder, polk bone extract powder) were used for a detection trial of gamma irradiation treatment up to 10 kGy by analyzing photostimulated luminescence (PSL), electron spin resonance (ESR) and thermoluminescence(TL). PSL results showed that the photon counts of non-irradiated samples were lower than 700, while those of irradiated samples were higher than 5000, which makes it possible to screen irradiated composite seasoning products at 1 kGy or over from the non-irradiated control. ESR signals measured for both irradiated samples were not irradiation-specific, even though they were dose dependent in the signal intensity. Radiation-induced TL glow curves were found in irradiated beef broth powder and furthernmore, TL ratio $(TL_4/TL_2)$ obtained by a re-irradiation step could verify the detection result of TL1 glow curves, showing ratios lower than 0.05 in the non-irradiated sample and higher than 1.00 in irradiated ones.

Monitoring of Commercial Red Pepper Powders for Their Irradiation Status (물리적 확인시험법을 이용한 시판 유통 중인 고춧가루의 방사선 조사여부 판별 모니터링)

  • Jeong, Mi-Seon;Ahn, Jae-Jun;Akram, Kashif;Kim, Gui-Ran;Kim, Hyun-Ku;Kwon, Joong-Ho
    • Korean Journal of Food Science and Technology
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    • v.44 no.6
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    • pp.673-679
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    • 2012
  • Ten commercially available red pepper powders were investigated using photostimulated-luminescence (PSL), thermoluminescence (TL) and electron spin resonance (ESR) analyses to confirm their irradiation status. The application of PSL, TL, and ESR analyses was also confirmed by in-house irradiation. In PSL-based screening, all samples gave negative photon counts (<700 PCs). The PSL calibration dose (1 kGy) showed a low sensitivity of 4 samples, while the others provided reliable screening results. TL glow curves demonstrated maximum peaks after $250^{\circ}C$ for the 6 samples; however 4 samples gave complex TL glow curves with maximum peaks in the range of $185-260^{\circ}C$ (radiation-specific), which could be the effect of an irradiated component in low concentration as the TL ratios of all samples were <0.1. Radiation-specific ESR features were absent in the all commercial samples. Variable irradiation detection properties were found; where the TL analysis showed the possible presence of an irradiated component in 4 samples requiring further monitoring and investigation.

Physicochemical Quality and Detection Properties of Irradiated Powdered-Soups (감마선 조사된 분말수프의 이화학적 품질과 조사여부 판별특성)

  • Kwak, Ji-Young;An, Yeoung-Eun;Jung, Bo-Yun;Kwon, Joong-Ho
    • Current Research on Agriculture and Life Sciences
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    • v.30 no.2
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    • pp.82-89
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    • 2012
  • Commercial powdered soups, such as potato soup(PS), corn soup(CS), and chicken-herb soup(CHS), were gamma-irradiated at 0, 1, 5 and 10 kGy and subjected to physicochemical evaluation and identification trials by analyzing photostimulated luminescence(PSL), electron spin resonance(ESR), and thermoluminescence(TL). The changes in moisture content and pH of soup samples were negligible upon irradiation. The Hunter's color determinations showed that lightness (L value) decreased and yellowness (b value) increased as the irradiation dose increased in PS sample. The viscosity of irradiated samples was reduced in the order of PS, CS and CHS. The analyses of PSL, ESR and TL were applicable to the identification of irradiated powdered-soups at more than 1 kGy by detecting PSL photon counts/60 sec(over 5000), radiation-induced multicomponents-ESR signal, and typical TL glow curve at $150-250^{\circ}C$.

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Identification of Irradiated Food Additives by Photostimulated Luminescence (PSL) Method (Photostimulated Luminescence (PSL) 방법에 의한 국내 유통 분말형 식품가공원료의 방사선 조사 여부 모니터링)

  • Yun, Hyejeong;Hur, Jungmu;Yang, Suhyung;Lee, Byoung-Hun;Kwon, Joong-Ho;Kim, Dongho
    • Journal of Radiation Industry
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    • v.2 no.1
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    • pp.27-34
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    • 2008
  • Photostimulated luminescence (PSL), electron spin resonance (ESR) and thermoluminescence (TL) analyses were conducted to detect whether 258 kinds of extracted and powdered forms food additives were irradiated or not. In a view of the PSL results, 9 kinds of the extracted and powdered samples (3.2%) showed over 5,000 photon counts $(60sec)^{-1}$ and these samples were judged to be irradiation-positive. Thirty nine kinds of the samples (15.6%) yielded 700~5,000 photon counts $(60sec)^{-1}$ and these samples were grouped into irradiation-potential, while the samples showed below 700 photon counts $(60sec)^{-1}$ sec were judged to be irradiation-negative. TL glow curves for minerals separated from 5 samples were detected at $150^{\circ}C$ with high intensity. However, TL analysis did not apply to other irradiation-positive and irradiation-potential samples because the minerals for TL detection were not separated from the samples. ESR measurements for irradiation-positive and irradiation-potential samples, judged by PSL detection, showed no specific signals to irradiation. The results indicated that PSL could be applied to identify irradiation treatment of extracted and powdered food additives, while TL was optional and ESR was not suitable for detection extracted and powdered food additives.